Artist Scott Gundersen sure can draw a beautiful portrait, but the <a href="http://inhabitat.com/chicago-to-replace-old-yellow-streetlights-with-energy-efficient-lamps/" target="_blank">Chicago</a>-based artist has taken his oversized drawings to the next level by repurposing discarded <a href="http://inhabitat.com/la-tonnelle-wine-tasting-room-tucks-into-swiss-terraced-cliffs/" target="_blank">wine</a> corks to color his pieces. Gundersen collects and stores the corks in his studio, standing thousands of them on their ends to make up the range of flesh tones of his subjects.

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Scott Gundersen Cork Art

The portraits start out as large photographs that Gundersen takes of his subjects. The <a href="http://inhabitat.com/greener-gadgets-video-interview-with-chris-jordan/" target="_blank">photographs</a> are then used as a reference, as he renders the faces into a large scale <a href="http://inhabitat.com/ingenious-students-make-a-machine-that-turns-art-school-waste-into-pretty-pencils/" target="_blank">pencil portrait</a>. After shading and contouring, he is ready for the corks!

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Scott Gundersen Cork Art

Stacked around his studio, the <a href="http://inhabitat.com/diy-make-your-own-shower-mat-out-of-recycled-wine-corks/" target="_blank">corks</a> are separated according to tone and color. Gundersen has a place for each cork, first scrutinizing the drawing to determine the placement of the tonal range.

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Scott Gundersen Cork Art

Using the cork, he “paints” the image, gradating from light <a href="http://inhabitat.com/delightful-cork-pinha-lamp-can-be-customized-in-a-snap/" target="_blank">corks</a> to darks to create the dimensions of his subject’s face, neck and hair.

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Scott Gundersen Cork Art

The corks are packed tightly together, and affixed to the portrait backing. The giant 96 x 66 inch <a href="http://inhabitat.com/kyle-beans-life-like-portraits-are-made-entirely-out-of-pencil-shavings/" target="_blank">portrait</a> of “Grace” took Gundersen 50 hours to actually build up. “Grace” used an incredible 9,217 corks to create! (That’s a lot of wine.)

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Scott Gundersen Cork Art

Gundersen’s cork portraits have been featured in Ripley’s Believe it or Not and on many news programs. He uses the cork as a way to draw attention to the importance of recycling and <a href="http://inhabitat.com/artist-uses-human-hair-to-construct-a-castle-of-3000-bricks/" target="_blank">sustainability through art</a>.

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Scott Gundersen Cork Art

Cork, once the standard used in <a href="http://inhabitat.com/packaging-the-future-is-boxed-or-bottled-wine-better-for-the-earth/" target="_blank">wine bottling</a>, has been in danger in recent years, being replaced by plastic corks and screw tops. The wine industry has directly affected the cork forests of the Mediterranean- as demand decreases, the forests are ripped up to grow other crops. Gundersen’s beautiful portraits utilize the precious sustainable material, giving it a place in the <a href="http://inhabitat.com/radioactive-control-luzinterruptus-haunts-dockville-festival-with-ghostly-nuclear-figures/" target="_blank">art world</a>, other than at the reception bar.

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Scott Gundersen Cork Art

Artist Scott Gundersen sure can draw a beautiful portrait, but the Chicago-based artist has taken his oversized drawings to the next level by repurposing discarded wine corks to color his pieces. Gundersen collects and stores the corks in his studio, standing thousands of them on their ends to make up the range of flesh tones of his subjects.